Central Pacific Financial Corp. filings document the regulatory record of a Hawaii bank holding company and its Central Pacific Bank subsidiary. Form 8-K reports furnish quarterly results, financial-condition updates, earnings supplements, Regulation FD investor presentations, and material governance events.
Proxy materials and annual-meeting reports cover director elections, advisory executive-compensation votes, independent auditor ratification, board composition, shareholder voting outcomes, and executive-pay governance. The filing record also reflects capital-structure and banking disclosures relevant to common shares, regulatory capital, loans, deposits, investment securities, operating expenses, and commercial banking activities.
Central Pacific Financial Corp. (CPF) director Paul K. Yonamine reported a single insider transaction on 1 July 2025 under a pre-arranged Rule 10b5-1 trading plan. He sold 2,765 common shares at $28.00 each, generating roughly $77.4 thousand in proceeds. After the sale, Yonamine’s direct holdings stand at 16,946 shares; he also retains multiple blocks of deferred, performance-based and time-based restricted stock (RSUs/PSUs) held both directly and through the CPF Directors Deferred Compensation Plan. No derivative securities were involved, and there were no purchases disclosed. The filing indicates that the timing was nondiscretionary because it followed the previously adopted 10b5-1 plan. Given the modest size of the transaction relative to typical daily trading volume and Yonamine’s continued sizable ownership, the Form 4 appears routine and is unlikely to be market-moving.
Central Pacific Financial Corp. (NYSE: CPF) filed a Form 8-K to disclose an amendment to its charter under Item 5.03.
On 24 June 2025 the company submitted Hawaii Form DC-7, formally cancelling all previously designated but unissued series of preferred stock. These cancelled series are immediately returned to the pool of 1,000,000 authorised but unissued preferred shares already permitted by the Restated Articles of Incorporation. The action does not change the total number of authorised preferred shares, does not create or retire any outstanding securities, and involves no financial metrics, cash flows or operational adjustments.
This appears to be a housekeeping measure that streamlines the capital structure by removing dormant designations and preserves flexibility for any future preferred issuances. No immediate dilution, earnings effect or strategic shift is indicated.